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News

Lake County Operational Area Emergency Operational Plan public comment period opens

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Lake County Sheriff’s Office of Emergency Services invites community members to review and provide feedback on the revised Lake County Operational Area Emergency Operational Plan, or EOP, during the open public review period.

The comment period runs from Dec. 3 to Dec. 30 at 5 p.m.

This is an important opportunity for residents, business owners, community organizations and other stakeholders to help shape how Lake County prepares for, responds to and recovers from emergencies and disasters.

The EOP serves as the central framework for coordinating emergency preparedness, response, recovery, and mitigation efforts across the Lake Operational Area.

It outlines critical roles, responsibilities, and procedures to manage emergencies effectively and ensure public safety.

The plan facilitates multi-jurisdictional coordination and includes processes for activating the emergency operations center, or EOC, during emergencies.

While the EOP sets the overall structure and operational framework, its Annexes provide detailed, function-specific, and hazard-specific guidance.

This review period focuses on the base plan, with current annexes under review and new ones in development.

To review the EOP and complete a brief survey designed to make feedback submission easy, please visit https://www.lakesheriff.com/about/oes/plans.

Officials said public input is invaluable in ensuring the EOP reflects the needs and priorities of our community.

Thompson votes to enhance preservation of America's natural resources, wildlife, and habitats

On Tuesday, Rep. Mike Thompson (CA-04) voted to pass the America's Conservation Enhancement, or ACE, Reauthorization Act of 2024.

Thompson’s office said the comprehensive legislation will enhance the preservation of America's natural resources, wildlife and habitats.

Thompson served as an original co-sponsor for this legislation in the House of Representatives.

“Reauthorizing our most critical wildlife conservation programs just makes sense,” said Thompson. “I was proud to vote today to reauthorize ACE and ensure the longevity of our North American Wetlands Conservation Act (NAWCA) Program. NAWCA has already helped conserve over 32 million acres of wetlands across our country and I look forward to seeing its continued positive impact in the years to come.”

A longtime advocate for wildlife and land conservation, Rep. Thompson serves as a member of the Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, Land Conservation Caucus, and Wildlife Refuge Caucus.

To date, he's voted to conserve 2.8 million acres of land through the Migratory Bird Conservation Commission and sponsored legislation that led to the permanent protection of nearly 1 million acres.

The ACE Act includes the following legislation, among other bills.

North American Wetlands Conservation Act:

• Protects waterfowl, fish, wildlife resources, and wetland habitats.
• Supports local economies that depend on outdoor recreation, tourism, and agriculture.
• Preserves American traditions such as hunting, fishing, bird watching, family farming, and cattle ranching.

National Fish Habitat Conservation Through Partnerships Act:

• Strengthens partnerships and projects to help maintain healthy fish populations and aquatic ecosystems.
• While making major investments in conservation of natural resources, the bill also includes important measures to enhance accountability and reporting to ensure the effectiveness and transparency of funded projects.

Thompson represents California’s Fourth Congressional District, which includes all or part of Lake, Napa, Solano, Sonoma and Yolo counties.

Clearlake City Council to approve final election results, consider development agreements

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — The Clearlake City Council this week will accept the November election results, consider development agreements, and a number of other proposed ordinances and resolutions.

The council will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 5, in the council chambers at Clearlake City Hall, 14050 Olympic Drive.

The agenda can be found here.

The meeting will be broadcast live on the city's YouTube channel or the Lake County PEGTV YouTube Channel.

Community members also can participate via Zoom. The webinar ID is 873 6220 2718, the pass code is 074808. One tap mobile is available at +16694449171,,87362202718#, or join by phone at 669-444-9171 or 253-205-0468.

The council has an extensive list of items of business on Thursday, and toward the end of the meeting they will consider approving the final Nov. 5 election results, which still were in preliminary form at the time of publication of this article.

After the adoption of the resolution accepting the results, City Clerk Melissa Swanson will deliver the oath of office to the newly elected council members.

Once seated, the council members will appoint the mayor and vice mayor for 2025.

Also on Thursday, the council will hold three public hearings, one to consider zoning ordinance text amendments and two for the purpose of approving development agreements with commercial cannabis operations at 14915 and 14935 Olympic Drive, Units C/D/E/F, and 14915 and 14935 Olympic Drive, units A/B2.

Under business, the council has a lengthy slate of items, including the approval of a memorandum of understanding with the city of Lakeport and county of Lake authorizing the formation of a Lake County Regional Housing Trust Fund and award of a contract for the Abandoned Vehicle Abatement Program towing, storing, dismantling and disposal services.

The council also will discuss a resolution recommending the Lake County Redevelopment Agency Oversight Board amend the loan terms for Olympic Village Apartments; a resolution approving the appraisal, fixing the amount of just compensation and authorizing offer to owner of a portion of 12105 San Joaquin Extension for right-of-way; the first reading of an ordinance adjusting councilmember compensation; and an update on the senior/community center project.

Also on Thursday, there will be presentations by Mayor David Claffey and Vice Mayor Joyce Overton, and the adoptable dogs for December.

On the meeting's consent agenda — items that are considered routine in nature and usually adopted on a single vote — are warrants; City Council minutes; the second reading of an ordinance amending the municipal code regarding fire mitigation fees; second reading of an ordinance establishing standards for utility construction and maintenance in the public right-of-way and standards for relocation of underground utilities; authorization of an amendment of the contract for the Clean California Austin Park Shade Structure Project in the amount of $19,333; authorization of an amendment of the contract with California Engineering Co. for the Burns Valley/Arrowhead Project in the amount of $189,569.11; discontinuance of the local emergency for winter storms; continuation of the local emergency for the Boyles fire; adoption of the 2024 conflict of interest code; adoption of the annual calendar of meetings for 2024; and the mayor’s appointment list.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social.

State Legislature holds special session to jumpstart effort to safeguard Californians from potential federal overreach

The California State Senate, led by Senate President pro Tempore Mike McGuire (D-North Coast), convened to begin the 2025-26 Legislative Session on Monday, welcoming in newly elected, re-elected and returning members, and kicking off the extraordinary session that is focused on protecting California’s people, policies and progress from federal interference.

Following Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proclamation, the California Legislature convened the first day of the special session to provide legal resources to protect California values, the state’s economy, fundamental civil rights, reproductive freedom, clean air and clean water, and working families — including immigrant families.

The special session, which will establish a new litigation fund, comes in response to the incoming federal administration's signaled policy proposals that Newsom’s office said would harm Californians.

The extraordinary session will run concurrently with the regular Legislative session.

“California is a tent pole of the country — from the economy to innovation to protecting and investing in rights and freedoms for all people,” said Newsom. “We will work with the incoming administration and we want President Trump to succeed in serving all Americans. But when there is overreach, when lives are threatened, when rights and freedoms are targeted, we will take action. And that is exactly what this special session is about — setting this state up for success, regardless of who is in the White House.”

“With potentially billions of dollars in federal funding on the line if the President-elect follows through on his promises, we must be — and we are — ready to act on day one," said Attorney General Rob Bonta. "I am looking forward to working with the governor and the Legislature to ensure my office has the resources we need to meet the demands of the moment and robustly defend California’s people, progress, and values.”

“Where we can work with the incoming federal administration, we will," Senate President pro Tem Mike McGuire. "Where the rights, safety, and economic security of Californians may be in danger, we will be prepared and we will respond. New and returning members of the Senate all took a solemn oath today to defend California. We believe in that oath. And we will act accordingly with the Governor and our colleagues in the Assembly.”

“While we always hope to collaborate with our federal partners, California will be ready to vigorously defend our interests and values from any unlawful action by the incoming Trump Administration,” said Assembly Budget Chair Jesse Gabriel. “We know from President-elect Trump’s statements — and from the more than 120 lawsuits that California filed during the first Trump Administration — that we must be prepared to defend ourselves. We’re not going to be caught flat-footed.”

New litigation fund

The governor is working with lawmakers to establish a litigation fund to bolster the state’s legal resources in response to the incoming federal administration's signaled policy proposals that would harm the state.

Senate Democrats, led by Pro Tem McGuire and in partnership with Senate Budget Chair Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) and Senate Majority Leader Lena Gonzalez (D-Long Beach), have introduced a budget bill as part of the special session.

SBX1-1, authored by Sen. Wiener, includes $25 million in funding proposed by Gov. Newsom for the California Department of Justice to bolster legal resources, and adds $10 million for county counsels and city attorneys for similar purposes. It also expands on that effort by including $25 million for legal aid efforts and legal services for local communities.

In keeping with the focus of the governor’s proclamation, the bill specifies that the grant funding for county counsels and city attorneys would be related to issues of reproductive health, the state’s clean air, clean water and climate laws, immigrant rights and LGBTQ civil rights. It also would add funding for legal services focused on grants for nonprofit pro bono legal teams, immigration and detention legal services, and data security projects.

Newsom’s office said the fund is meant to defend California from unconstitutional federal overreach, challenge illegal federal actions in court and take administrative actions to reduce potential harm.

The proposed legal investment has the potential to yield significant returns for California families and protect billions of dollars in state funding, Newsom’s office reported. The new litigation fund will help safeguard critical funding for disaster relief, health care programs and other vital services that millions of Californians depend on daily.

It will also position the state to defend against unlawful federal actions that could jeopardize not only tangible resources but also immeasurable protections, such as those related to health and civil rights, Newsom’s office said.

During President-elect Trump’s first term, his administration made multiple attempts to withhold federal funds from California and harm the state.

From 2017 to 2021, the California DOJ filed 122 lawsuits against the Trump administration in response. The state invested approximately $42 million to support this litigation.

This legal action not only safeguarded California’s values and residents but also delivered tangible financial benefits, Newsom’s office said.

For example, in just one successful case, the federal government reimbursed California nearly $60 million in federal public safety grants as a result of litigation. In another case won against the Trump administration for delaying energy efficiency standards, the state's victory was estimated to generate over $8 billion in energy savings for consumers over the next three decades.

In another separate case, the state’s litigation protected billions of dollars in federal funding for California’s public health care and other federally funded programs that provide crucial health, education and labor services.

What comes next

Proposed legislation is expected to be introduced in the state Legislature. In the coming weeks, the Legislature has indicated it will hold committee hearings on the legislation. During this process, the governor will actively collaborate with legislative leaders and the attorney general to refine and advance the measure.

The legislation is expected to reach the governor’s desk and be signed into law before Jan. 20, 2025, the day Trump takes office.

While the state is prepared to lead efforts to challenge any unlawful actions by the federal government, Gov. Newsom said he is committed to working with President-elect Trump wherever there is common ground to improve the lives of nearly 40 million Californians.

Last month, Governor Newsom traveled to Washington, D.C., for a series of meetings at the White House and on Capitol Hill to discuss the approval of key initiatives to improve health care, mental health and clean air in the state, as well as the approval of disaster relief funds.

Newsom’s office said he is looking to build on that momentum to continue to deliver for millions of Californians who rely on essential federal funding and programs that support their daily lives.

Wells Fargo awards $300,000 Grant to California Finance Consortium

Wells Fargo has awarded a $300,000 grant to the California Finance Consortium, or CFC, to enhance small business technical assistance and lending services across 13 Northern California counties.

The announcement on the funding said, “This funding underscores Wells Fargo’s commitment to empowering local communities and fostering economic growth by supporting small businesses.”

The targeted counties include Butte, Del Norte, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Mendocino, Modoc, Shasta, Siskiyou, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity and Yuba.

CFC will deploy these services through its regional partners: 3CORE, North Edge (formerly Arcata Economic Development Corp.), Superior California Economic Development Inc. and Yuba-Sutter Economic Development Corp.

Key benefits of the grant include:

Enhanced technical assistance: Small businesses will receive comprehensive support in developing robust business plans, financial projections, and operational strategies to ensure sustainability and growth.

Increased lending capacity: The grant will bolster lending capabilities, providing more small businesses with access to necessary capital.

Regional economic growth: By supporting small businesses, the grant will help stimulate job creation and economic development within the 13 counties.

"We are thrilled to partner with Wells Fargo Bank N.A. to support the entrepreneurial spirit of Northern California," said Brynda Stranix, president of California Finance Consortium. "This grant will significantly enhance our ability to provide small businesses with the tools and resources they need to thrive, ultimately contributing to the economic vitality of our communities. Our collaboration with 3CORE, North Edge, Superior California Economic Development, and Yuba-Sutter Economic Development Corp. will ensure these services are effectively delivered throughout the region."

This grant builds on Wells Fargo’s commitment to small business growth and the recent success of its Open for Business Fund, a national small business recovery effort.

New economic impact data shows that effort helped small business owners keep or sustain roughly 461,000 jobs nationwide, and technical assistance played a key role in propelling small businesses forward.

“We recognize the crucial role small businesses play in driving economic growth and creating jobs,” said Kären Woodruff, senior vice president, community relations, Wells Fargo. “Our support of the California Finance Corporation is a testament to our commitment to helping small businesses succeed and our dedication to strengthening the economic fabric of Northern California.”

Taxpayers spend 22% more per patient to support Medicare Advantage – the private alternative to Medicare that promised to cost less

 

Medicare Advantage was supposed to find efficiencies, but instead is costing taxpayers an extra $83 billion a year. Ariel Skelley/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Medicare Advantage – the commercial alternative to traditional Medicare – is drawing down federal health care funds, costing taxpayers an extra 22% per enrollee to the tune of US$83 billion a year.

Medicare Advantage, also known as Part C, was supposed to save the government money. The competition among private insurance companies, and with traditional Medicare, to manage patient care was meant to give insurance companies an incentive to find efficiencies. Instead, the program’s payment rules overpay insurance companies on the taxpayer’s dime.

We are health care policy experts who study Medicare, including how the structure of the Medicare payment system is, in the case of Medicare Advantage, working against taxpayers.

Medicare beneficiaries choose an insurance plan when they turn 65. Younger people can also become eligible for Medicare due to chronic conditions or disabilities. Beneficiaries have a variety of options, including the traditional Medicare program administered by the U.S. government, Medigap supplements to that program administered by private companies, and all-in-one Medicare Advantage plans administered by private companies.

Commercial Medicare Advantage plans are increasingly popular – over half of Medicare beneficiaries are enrolled in them, and this share continues to grow. People are attracted to these plans for their extra benefits and out-of-pocket spending limits. But due to a loophole in most states, enrolling in or switching to Medicare Advantage is effectively a one-way street. The Senate Finance Committee has also found that some plans have used deceptive, aggressive and potentially harmful sales and marketing tactics to increase enrollment.

Baked into the plan

Researchers have found that the overpayment to Medicare Advantage companies, which has grown over time, was, intentionally or not, baked into the Medicare Advantage payment system. Medicare Advantage plans are paid more for enrolling people who seem sicker, because these people typically use more care and so would be more expensive to cover in traditional Medicare.

However, differences in how people’s illnesses are recorded by Medicare Advantage plans causes enrollees to seem sicker and costlier on paper than they are in real life. This issue, alongside other adjustments to payments, leads to overpayment with taxpayer dollars to insurance companies.

Some of this extra money is spent to lower cost sharing, lower prescription drug premiums and increase supplemental benefits like vision and dental care. Though Medicare Advantage enrollees may like these benefits, funding them this way is expensive. For every extra dollar that taxpayers pay to Medicare Advantage companies, only roughly 50 to 60 cents goes to beneficiaries in the form of lower premiums or extra benefits.

As Medicare Advantage becomes increasingly expensive, the Medicare program continues to face funding challenges.

In our view, in order for Medicare to survive long term, Medicare Advantage reform is needed. The way the government pays the private insurers who administer Medicare Advantage plans, which may seem like a black box, is key to why the government overpays Medicare Advantage plans relative to traditional Medicare.

Paying Medicare Advantage

Private plans have been a part of the Medicare system since 1966 and have been paid through several different systems. They garnered only a very small share of enrollment until 2006.

The current Medicare Advantage payment system, implemented in 2006 and heavily reformed by the Affordable Care Act in 2010, had two policy goals. It was designed to encourage private plans to offer the same or better coverage than traditional Medicare at equal or lesser cost. And, to make sure beneficiaries would have multiple Medicare Advantage plans to choose from, the system was also designed to be profitable enough for insurers to entice them to offer multiple plans throughout the country.

To accomplish this, Medicare established benchmark estimates for each county. This benchmark calculation begins with an estimate of what the government-administered traditional Medicare plan would spend on the average county resident. This value is adjusted based on several factors, including enrollee location and plan quality ratings, to give each plan its own benchmark.

Medicare Advantage plans then submit bids, or estimates, of what they expect their plans to spend on the average county enrollee. If a plan’s spending estimate is above the benchmark, enrollees pay the difference as a Part C premium.

Most plans’ spending estimates are below the benchmark, however, meaning they project that the plans will provide coverage that is equivalent to traditional Medicare at a lower cost than the benchmark. These plans don’t charge patients a Part C premium. Instead, they receive a portion of the difference between their spending estimate and the benchmark as a rebate that they are supposed to pass on to their enrollees as extras, like reductions in cost-sharing, lower prescription drug premiums and supplemental benefits.

Finally, in a process known as risk adjustment, Medicare payments to Medicare Advantage health plans are adjusted based on the health of their enrollees. The plans are paid more for enrollees who seem sicker.

Two sets of stacked boxes sit below a vertical bar labeled Risk-Adjusted Benchmark. A vertical line bisecting the boxes is labelled what Medicare would actually spend on an enrollee in traditional Medicare
The government pays Medicare Advantage plans based on Medicare’s cost estimates for a given county. The benchmark is an estimate from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services of what it would cost to cover an average county enrollee in traditional Medicare, plus adjustments including quartile payments and quality bonuses. The risk-adjusted benchmark also takes into consideration an enrollee’s health. Samantha Randall at USC, CC BY-ND

Theory versus reality

In theory, this payment system should save the Medicare system money because the risk-adjusted benchmark that Medicare estimates for each plan should run, on average, equal to what Medicare would actually spend on a plan’s enrollees if they had enrolled in traditional Medicare instead.

In reality, the risk-adjusted benchmark estimates are far above traditional Medicare costs. This causes Medicare – really, taxpayers – to spend more for each person who is enrolled in Medicare Advantage than if that person had enrolled in traditional Medicare.

Why are payment estimates so high? There are two main culprits: benchmark modifications designed to encourage Medicare Advantage plan availability, and risk adjustments that overestimate how sick Medicare Advantage enrollees are.

Two sets of stacked boxes with dotted arrows on the left side of each labeled Medicare Advantage Plan Bid sit below vertical bars labeled Benchmark and Risk-Adjusted Benchmark.
High risk-adjusted benchmarks lead to overpayments from the government to the private companies that administer Medicare Advantage plans. Samantha Randall at USC, CC BY-ND

Benchmark modifications

Since the current Medicare Advantage payment system started in 2006, policymaker modifications have made Medicare’s benchmark estimates less tied to what the plan spends on each enrollee.

In 2012, as part of the Affordable Care Act, Medicare Advantage benchmark estimates received another layer: “quartile adjustments.” These made the benchmark estimates, and therefore payments to Medicare Advantage companies, higher in areas with low traditional Medicare spending and lower in areas with high traditional Medicare spending. This benchmark adjustment was meant to encourage more equitable access to Medicare Advantage options.

In that same year, Medicare Advantage plans started receiving “quality bonus payments” with plans that have higher “star ratings” based on quality factors such as enrollee health outcomes and care for chronic conditions receiving higher bonuses.

However, research shows that ratings have not necessarily improved quality and may have exacerbated racial inequality.

Even before fully taking into account risk adjustment, recent estimates peg the benchmarks, on average, as 8% higher than average traditional Medicare spending. This means that a Medicare Advantage plan’s spending estimate could be below the benchmark and the plan would still get paid more for its enrollees than it would have cost the government to cover those same enrollees in traditional Medicare.

Overestimating enrollee sickness

The second major source of overpayment is health risk adjustment, which tends to overestimate how sick Medicare Advantage enrollees are.

Each year, Medicare studies traditional Medicare diagnoses, such as diabetes, depression and arthritis, to understand which have higher treatment costs. Medicare uses this information to adjust its payments for Medicare Advantage plans. Payments are lowered for plans with lower predicted costs based on diagnoses and raised for plans with higher predicted costs. This process is known as risk adjustment.

But there is a critical bias baked into risk adjustment. Medicare Advantage companies know that they’re paid more if their enrollees seem more sick, so they diligently make sure each enrollee has as many diagnoses recorded as possible.

This can include legal activities like reviewing enrollee charts to ensure that diagnoses are recorded accurately. It can also occasionally entail outright fraud, where charts are “upcoded” to include diagnoses that patients don’t actually have.

In traditional Medicare, most providers – the exception being Accountable Care Organizations – are not paid more for recording diagnoses. This difference means that the same beneficiary is likely to have fewer recorded diagnoses if they are enrolled in traditional Medicare rather than a private insurer’s Medicare Advantage plan. Policy experts refer to this phenomenon as a difference in “coding intensity” between Medicare Advantage and traditional Medicare.

Human figure with arrows to two boxes. Left box has two plus symbols labelled  recorded diagnoses and one dollar sign. Right box has five symbols and three dollar signs.
The same person is likely to be documented with more illnesses if they enroll in Medicare Advantage rather than traditional Medicare – and cost taxpayers more money. Samantha Randall at USC, CC BY-ND

In addition, Medicare Advantage plans often try to recruit beneficiaries whose health care costs will be lower than their diagnoses would predict, such as someone with a very mild form of arthritis. This is known as “favorable selection.”

The differences in coding and favorable selection make beneficiaries look sicker when they enroll in Medicare Advantage instead of traditional Medicare. This makes cost estimates higher than they should be. Research shows that this mismatch – and resulting overpayment – is likely only going to get worse as Medicare Advantage grows.

Where the money goes

Some of the excess payments to Medicare Advantage are returned to enrollees through extra benefits, funded by rebates. Extra benefits include cost-sharing reductions for medical care and prescription drugs, lower Part B and D premiums, and extra “supplemental benefits” like hearing aids and dental care that traditional Medicare doesn’t cover.

Medicare Advantage enrollees may enjoy these benefits, which could be considered a reward for enrolling in Medicare Advantage, which, unlike traditional Medicare, has prior authorization requirements and limited provider networks.

However, according to some policy experts, the current means of funding these extra benefits is unnecessarily expensive and inequitable.

It also makes it difficult for traditional Medicare to compete with Medicare Advantage.

Traditional Medicare, which tends to cost the Medicare program less per enrollee, is only allowed to provide the standard Medicare benefits package. If its enrollees want dental coverage or hearing aids, they have to purchase these separately, alongside a Part D plan for prescription drugs and a Medigap plan to lower their deductibles and co-payments.

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Medicare Advantage plans offer extras, but at a high cost to the Medicare system – and taxpayers. Only 50-60 cents of a dollar spent is returned to enrollees as decreased costs or increased benefits. AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

The system sets up Medicare Advantage plans to not only be overpaid but also be increasingly popular, all on the taxpayers’ dime. Plans heavily advertise to prospective enrollees who, once enrolled in Medicare Advantage, will likely have difficulty switching into traditional Medicare, even if they decide the extra benefits are not worth the prior authorization hassles and the limited provider networks. In contrast, traditional Medicare typically does not engage in as much direct advertising. The federal government only accounts for 7% of Medicare-related ads.

At the same time, some people who need more health care and are having trouble getting it through their Medicare Advantage plan – and are able to switch back to traditional Medicare – are doing so, according to an investigation by The Wall Street Journal. This leaves taxpayers to pick up care for these patients just as their needs rise.

Where do we go from here?

Many researchers have proposed ways to reduce excess government spending on Medicare Advantage, including expanding risk adjustment audits, reducing or eliminating quality bonus payments or using more data to improve benchmark estimates of enrollee costs. Others have proposed even more fundamental reforms to the Medicare Advantage payment system, including changing the basis of plan payments so that Medicare Advantage plans will compete more with each other.

Reducing payments to plans may have to be traded off with reductions in plan benefits, though projections suggest the reductions would be modest.

There is a long-running debate over what type of coverage should be required under both traditional Medicare and Medicare Advantage. Recently, policy experts have advocated for introducing an out-of-pocket maximum to traditional Medicare. There have also been multiple unsuccessful efforts to make dental, vision, and hearing services part of the standard Medicare benefits package.

Although all older people require regular dental care and many of them require hearing aids, providing these benefits to everyone enrolled in traditional Medicare would not be cheap. One approach to providing these important benefits without significantly raising costs is to make these benefits means-tested. This would allow people with lower incomes to purchase them at a lower price than higher-income people. However, means-testing in Medicare can be controversial.

There is also debate over how much Medicare Advantage plans should be allowed to vary. The average Medicare beneficiary has over 40 Medicare Advantage plans to choose from, making it overwhelming to compare plans. For instance, right now, the average person eligible for Medicare would have to sift through the fine print of dozens of different plans to compare important factors, such as out-of-pocket maximums for medical care, coverage for dental cleanings, cost-sharing for inpatient stays, and provider networks.

Although millions of people are in suboptimal plans, 70% of people don’t even compare plans, let alone switch plans, during the annual enrollment period at the end of the year, likely because the process of comparing plans and switching is difficult, especially for older Americans.

MedPAC, a congressional advising committee, suggests that limiting variation in certain important benefits, like out-of-pocket maximums and dental, vision and hearing benefits, could help the plan selection process work better, while still allowing for flexibility in other benefits. The challenge is figuring out how to standardize without unduly reducing consumers’ options.

The Medicare Advantage program enrolls over half of Medicare beneficiaries. However, the $83-billion-per-year overpayment of plans, which amounts to more than 8% of Medicare’s total budget, is unsustainable. We believe the Medicare Advantage payment system needs a broad reform that aligns insurers’ incentives with the needs of Medicare beneficiaries and American taxpayers.

This article is part of an occasional series examining the U.S. Medicare system.

Past articles in the series:

Medicare vs. Medicare Advantage: sales pitches are often from biased sources, the choices can be overwhelming and impartial help is not equally available to allThe Conversation

Grace McCormack, Postdoctoral researcher of Health Policy and Economics, University of Southern California and Erin Duffy, Research Scientist and Director of Research Training in Health Policy and Economics, University of Southern California

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Community

  • Lake County Wine Alliance offers sponsor update; beneficiary applications open 

  • Mendocino National Forest announces seasonal hiring for upcoming field season

Public Safety

  • Lakeport Police logs: Thursday, Jan. 15

  • Lakeport Police logs: Wednesday, Jan. 14

Education

  • Woodland Community College receives maximum eight-year reaffirmation of accreditation from ACCJC

  • SNHU announces Fall 2025 President's List

Health

  • California ranks 24th in America’s Health Rankings Annual Report from United Health Foundation

  • Healthy blood donors especially vital during active flu season

Business

  • Two Lake County Mediacom employees earn company’s top service awards

  • Redwood Credit Union launches holiday gift and porch-to-pantry food drives

Obituaries

  • Rufino ‘Ray’ Pato

  • Patty Lee Smith

Opinion & Letters

  • The benefits of music for students

  • How to ease the burden of high electric bills

Veterans

  • CalVet and CSU Long Beach team up to improve data collection related to veteran suicides

  • A ‘Big Step Forward’ for Gulf War Veterans

Recreation

  • Wet weather trail closure in effect on Upper Lake Ranger District

  • Mendocino National Forest seeking public input on OHV grant applications

  • State Parks announces 2026 Anderson Marsh nature walk schedule 

  • BLM lifts seasonal fire restrictions in central California

Religion

  • Kelseyville Presbyterian to host Ash Wednesday service and Lenten dinner Feb. 18

  • Kelseyville Presbyterian Church to hold ‘Longest Night’ service Dec. 21

Arts & Life

  • Auditions announced for original musical ‘Even In Shadow’ set for March 21 and 28

  • ‘The Rip’ action heist; ‘Steal’ grounded in a crime thriller

Government & Politics

  • Lake County Democrats issue endorsements in local races for the June California Primary

  • County negotiates money-saving power purchase agreement

Legals

  • March 3 hearing on ordinance amending code for commercial cannabis uses

  • Feb. 12 public hearing on resolution to establish standards for agricultural roads

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